Thursday, December 18, 2025
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Broadway: Michael Moore Will Make His Broadway Debut This Summer in One Man Show

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UPDATE The one man show is called “The Terms of My Surrender.” Moore begins performances at the Belasco at the end of July for 12 weeks. Michael Mayer directs, which is confusing. 

Moore poses the question: Can a Broadway show take down a sitting President?” 

We

We’ll see.

 

earlier:

Oscar winner documentary filmmaker and political agitator (in the best way) Michael Moore is making a big announcement this morning. He’s coming to Broadway. Moore has scheduled an 11am press conference at Sardi’s, Broadway’s most famous watering hole. He’s also hired one of the top PR agencies to do it, O&M, the same company that represents “Hello, Dolly!” It’s unlikely Moore will be stepping in for Bette Midler or David Hyde Pierce, however. The odds are he’ll bring his one man show to a small theater for a limited run. Moore owns a small theater in Ohio. Last fall he taped a performance there that became a last minute plea to voters to turn out for Hillary Clinton. So stay tuned…

What Cost More and Made Less than the Met Ball? The Met Ball Movie “First Monday in May”

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We already know that the Met Ball has annual costs of over $3 million that get absorbed somehow in the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s budget. Anna Wintour’s annual Halloween party in May is an expensive ad for herself and the Museum. And the Museum, as we know, is bleeding money right now.

A year ago, the Met Ball was preceded by a film release– do you remember this? “First Monday in May” opened the Tribeca Film Festival. It was a long, tedious account of how the MetBall comes about. There was a limited audience for this, as it turns out.

“First Monday” made about $500K in the US and $500K total from the UK, New Zealand, Australia and Russia, of all places. The UK was the least interested. There it took in only $97,000.

So far there’s no accounting for how much “First Monday” lost or if any of the money that came in went to the Museum. It was such a bore it sank into oblivion after 62 days in release. In its last week in release “First Monday” made $1,006. It was not offered for awards consideration. I don’t believe (I may be wrong) that its distributor, Magnolia Pictures, included a DVD of it in their Oscar package.

The actual DVD, released in August 2016, is ranked at number 6,458 on amazon.com.

According to reports, the Met is now considering a mandated admission fee. The current suggested entrance fee is $25.

Books: Meryl Streep, Other Stars Read Audio Version of HBO Documentary Chief Sheila Nevins’ Excellent Collection of Essays

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Here’s a list of the people who read the audio version of Sheila Nevins’ new book: Alan Alda, Bob Balaban, Christine Baranski, Kathy Bates, Ellen Burstyn, Glenn Close, Katie Couric, John Henry Cox, Blythe Danner, Lena Dunham, Edie Falco, Tovah Feldshuh, Diane von Furstenberg, Whoopi Goldberg, Gayle King, Diane Lane, Sandra Lee, Judith Light, Jenna Lyons, Audra McDonald, Janet Mock, Sheila Nevins, Rosie O’Donnell, Jean Richards, RuPaul, Liz Smith, Lesley Stahl, Gloria Steinem, Martha Stewart, Meryl Streep, Marlo Thomas, Lily Tomlin, and Gloria Vanderbilt.

Some group, huh?

“You Don’t Look Your Age…And Other Fairytales” will be published on Tuesday. It’s a collection of essays by the most powerful woman at HBO, maybe in television, and certainly in documentaries. Nevins, who is beloved in the film world, is the Queen of All Documentaries. Every single such film that emanates from HBO has been under her jurisdiction for an eternity. All their Emmy and Oscar nominees and winners– they came from Sheila Nevins.

So that’s why it’s a little weird that “HBO” is not mentioned in the book. There are no stories about making all those films. Instead, “You Don’t Look Your Age” is a collection of personal statements, poems, and other musings. Nevins talks about her difficult childhood, her mother’s lifelong illness, their strained relationship, and even facelifts. It’s all done in a very humorous way, except when things turn serious. Even then, though, Nevins makes lemonade from lemons.

“I’ve spent most of my life making documentaries,” Nevins starts her book. “The camera is on me now.”

“You Don’t Look Your Age” is like a Hollywood gift bag. Great for the ladies, but not so much for the men. A fascinating read, for sure. But the gift bags are mostly products for women. (Never stereo equipment or even a Phillips screwdriver.) Next book, though, please tell how you made those movies and survived all those HBO regimes. That’s what I want in my gift bag!

Kevin Spacey Charging $2,500 for One Man Show of “Darrow” Plus Meet and Greet

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You really have to be a fan of Kevin Spacey to appreciate his latest gimmick. He’s going to do a one man show of a play about Clarence Darrow at Arthur Ashe Stadium in Forest Hills. Two performance. Capacity: 23,000.

Price: Floor seats are $500. Add another $2,000 if you want to met Spacey after the show and maybe get a photo.

I mean, you really have to be a super fan.

Spacey told Jimmy Fallon a couple of night ago on the Tonight show that 300 seats would be set aside for students. They will be on the floor and 10 bucks. (So get out your old student ID!) Spacey didn’t mention the $2,500 seats or even the $500 seats.

It’s possible that playing Frank Underwood so long on “House of Cards” has really skewed Spacey’s thought process.

Quentin Tarantino Says Even Horror Master Wes Craven Walked Out of the Original Screening of “Reservoir Dogs” 25 Years Ago

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Quentin Tarantino provided his own 35 mm print for the 25th anniversary screening of “Reservoir Dogs” at The Tribeca Film Festival Thursday evening at the Beacon Theater and the film still looks sensational with the blood looking particularly vivid.
Tarantino sat through the screening, so engrossed in the film that when a woman tried to scoot past him in the row to get to her seat, he asked her to walk around the other side of the theater so he wouldn’t be disturbed. She slipped past anyway.
Following the screening, Tarantino, Michael Madsen, Harvey Keitel, Steve Buscemi and Tim Roth reunited for a panel that was as funny as it was epic. It was moderated by entertainment writer Lynn Hirschberg although the guys mainly reminisced and talked to each other.
On taking the stage, Tarantino told the crowd, “Except for all your cell phones you guys were a great audience.”
“Reservoir Dogs” is about a jewelry heist gone terribly wrong. The crime is committed by a bunch of bunglers, perfect strangers who know each other only by their invented names, which are colors.
The movie debuted at Sundance, where the first screening was a disaster said Tarantino.
“They didn’t have the right lens and the movie looked like caca all the way through.” He added,“That would be bad enough, but then it gets to the final climax when everyone’s yelling at each other, everyone’s got their guns pointed on everybody else, then all of sudden…. almost as if on purpose…right at the height of that scene there’s a power outrage… I was like, so this is what it’s like to watch your movie in public!”
The second week it was shown at the big industry screening and big names showed up, including Faye Dunaway and Sean Penn. “That screening went fantastic!” said Tarantino, with Dunaway even asking a question about composition.
It was the infamous torture scene that got everyone talking and people started to leave the theater
Tarantino said the first year the film was on the festival circuit he started counting the walkouts.
 Thirty three was the largest number of people exiting the theater during that scene said Tarantino.
At one festival they were screening one of Peter Jackson’s earliest films, “Dead Alive,” said Tarantino.
“People were drowning in zombie blood and guts. I thought, okay, I’ve got an audience that won’t walk out… five people walked, including Wes Craven. The guy who did ‘A Nightmare on Elm Street’ and ‘The Last House on the Left,’ my movie is too tough for him!”
In the torture scene – as everyone knows by now – Madsen turns on the radio and “Stuck in the Middle With You” is on. He’s got a straight razor in his hand and starts dancing to the tune and slices off the ear of a young cop tied to a chair.
Madsen had a problem with the scene. The cop pleads for his life, saying he has a kid. “That fucked him up,” said Tarantino because Madsen had just had a son.
“I didn’t want to fucking do it. He’s got a kid,” said Madsen.
“When he was just killing that was fun and the audience can appreciate it, but now that you learn he’s got a son it’s not so much fun,” said Madsen.
And even though they rehearsed for two weeks prior to shooting for five, they never rehearsed the dance scene.
“That’s true, you never made me do it in rehearsal because I was so intimated by it. I didn’t know what to do,” said Madsen. “I didn’t know if I wanted to do it or not. In the script it said, ‘ Mr. Blonde maniacally dances around (the cop).’ I remember specifically that’s what it said. And I kept thinking what the fuck does that mean?… What am I going do? So he never made me do it during rehearsal. He trusted me that on the day I would come up with something.”
Turns out Madsen never practiced the scene at home either. On the day of the shoot,
Madsen said,  “I didn’t know what the hell to do. I heard that music and I thought, ‘Oh fuck I better do something.’… I remembered some weird little film that Jimmy Cagney did – I don’t remember the name of it – but he did this crazy little dance thing. It just popped into my head at the last second. That’s where it came from.”
They did the scene three times and the first time is the one immortalize do screen. It’s been with him ever since.
A few years ago he went to Michigan to open up a theater. “They were going to name it the Michael Madsen Theater,” he said. “I thought it was great, and the theater was as big as that closet over there, but it was a great honor and I was happy to show up. And then they sent me a memo of what I was supposed to do and it said, ‘Well first we’ll announce the naming of the theater and then Michael Madsen will come out doing the Mr. Blonde dance…  There’s no way I’m going to do that! I started to imagine myself 80 years old, someone asking me to do the Mr. Blonde dance. It’s been following me around forever.”
After the panel the actors went next door to the Beacon Hotel. I was sitting at the bar and Tim Roth, who is very charming, apologized to me for taking over the space. Then all of them, including Tarantino and Madsen, sat at a table watched over by two big security guards. It looked like no one could get into the bar/restaurant. They were still there when I left at 1 a.m.
Photo c2017 Showbiz411 by Paula Schwartz

“Godfather” Reunion: Diane Keaton Wouldn’t Sit Next to Al Pacino, Who Says He Screen Tested at Least “Six Times”

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I had fun watching “The Godfather” reunion Q&A panel on Facebook. At least I was at home. Some people were in Radio City Music Hall, where they’d been since at least 1 pm onward for seven or right hours without food.

The finale of the Tribeca Film Festival took place not in Tribeca but at 49th St. and Sixth Avenue, but that’s another story. For the reunion, director Taylor Hackford moderated an austere panel that included: director Francis Ford Coppola, Al Pacino, Robert DeNiro, Robert Duvall, Talia Shire, James Caan and Diane Keaton. Marlon Brando is dead.  Former Paramount chief Robert Evans was mentioned– a lot. Peter Bart, who makes it seem like he made “The Godfather,” was not.

Think of it. The first movie earned Best Actor for Marlon Brando. Producer Al Ruddy won Best Picture.  The second film also won Best Picture. Coppola won Best Director and was also nominated for Best Picture for “The Conversation.” DeNiro won an Oscar for “The Godfather Part 2,” one of five statues the movie won that night.

After that, Keaton, Duvall, and Pacino all went on to win Oscars in other movies. Ruddy would go on to win Best Picture again producing “Million Dollar Baby” in 2005.

Forty five years later they all– except Brando– reunited on the Radio City stage after the audience had watched seven hours of their work.

No one marked the chairs on stage with name signs. So it was up to the actors and the director to take their seats. Keaton was called out by Jane Rosenthal right after Pacino, but she didn’t follow him. And when it came time to sit down, Keaton skillfully moved away from Pacino and made sure two people separated them. Well played. Why? Their romance ended badly in the late 1980s just as “The Godfather III” was being filmed. Whoops!

Hackford, a director, played to Coppola, who had a lot of good stories about getting his cast approved by Paramount. Caan turned out to be pretty good at getting a word in edgewise even though he was semi coherent. Keaton spoke a little, DeNiro almost not at all. Shire talked about being cast despite being Coppola’s sister.

Duvall recalled that Brando was amused by Caan on set. Shire remembered being such a novice that she couldn’t find her mark and walked into a camera on Day 1.

Pacino said he tested countless times, “at least six times” to play Michael Corleone. And he didn’t even want to play Michael. He wanted to play Sonny. Coppola said at one point Pacino’s girlfriend yelled at him over the phone, “You’re torturing him!” Evans thought Pacino was too short and didn’t want him. “He wanted someone tall and handsome, who looked like him. I wanted someone who looked like me,”
Coppola said. Pacino seemed amused by this. “We could be related,” he said, a little sarcasticallyt.

Coppola said he wasn’t such a fan of Mario Puzo’s novel. “I was disappointed,” he said. “It was mostly about Lucy Mancini’s anatomy.” (He’s right, I was 13 when the book was published, and page 27 of the hardcover was a must read among all seventh graders if you could sneak the book out of the parents’ bedroom.)

There was also the revelation that DeNiro was on hold for a role in the first movie, but went off to be in “The Gang That Couldn’t Shoot Straight.” He got the role in that movie that Pacino was supposed to play if he didn’t get “The Godfather.” In 1970 it must have been very stressful. And who would have guessed that in 2017 they’d all be discussing it on stage?

 

Alessandro Nivola Wins Best Actor at Tribeca Film Festival, Shows Up By Accident: “One of the weirdest days of my life”

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We’re just thrilled that on Thursday night Alessandro Nivola has won Best Actor at the Tribeca Film Festival for a movie called “One Percent More Humid.” Nivola, who’s married to actress Emily Mortimer, has just done wall-to-wall good work since we met him in 1999 with “Mansfield Park” through all kinds of great performances in “Laurel Canyon,” the two “Goal!” movies, “Janie Jones,” “American Hustle,” and many others. He goes to Cannes next month in Lynne Ramsay’s “You Were Never Really Here.”

Nivola wrote me today after he won the Tribeca award. I thought I’d share this with you:

“I was on the Tribeca foreign film jury this year and most of my fellow jurors had to go out of town before the Awards ceremony.  It was down to just Willem Dafoe and he said “come on man – you’re not gonna make me do this alone are you?”  Emily is out of town and I’d been neglecting my kids so I wasn’t planning on going, but I reluctantly agreed to go keep him company.  So on the day, we had just finished presenting the foreign awards and were sitting back stage after in the green room having a drink when the festival organizers came in and told us we had to go and watch the end of the ceremony out in the auditorium.  We were like “Why?? we’ve done our bit and now we’re having a drink!” But they were insistent and even physically pushed us back inside.

Willem and I by this time were pretty pissed off and we went and sat at the very back of the auditorium with our feet up on the seats in front of us like two naughty high-schoolers, when suddenly he elbows me in the ribs and says, “You won, man!”  I said “what?” And he said “they just called your name.”

I had no idea what the f**k was going on.  I didn’t know I was eligible for any award and because we’d been bitching I hadn’t heard them talking about my performance – “For his raw, complex and deeply human portrayal of a middle-aged teacher and writer who tries to rekindle his creativity by plunging into an ill-advised affair with a student…blah blah blah” and I hadn’t heard it.  I had no speech – nothing prepared – and there were like 500 people there.  I made my way all the way down to the stage, stared at everyone like I was brain dead, said some embarrassing nonsense that I can’t remember, and went home.  One of the weirdest days of my life…”

Congrats, Alessandro! And now on to many more awards…

Cannes: Roman Polanski’s “Based on A True Story” Will Show At End of Fest When Most Are Gone

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EXCLUSIVE A couple of updates regarding the 2017 Cannes Film Festival:

Roman Polanski’s “Based on a True Story” is set to play the festival on the second Saturday, just as “Venus in Fur” did in 2013. Sacre bleu! Most everyone is gone by then. I always feel bad for the movie that gets this distinction. It’s an after-thought. But this is also a nod to Polanski, still very highly regarded as a filmmaker no matter what. “Based on a True Story” stars his wife, Emmanuelle Seigner, and Eva Green…

There aren’t a lot of American films for this year, and not too many stars. Lynne Ramsay’s “you Were Never Really Here” is coming — but it’s not finished! She’s still working on it! Right now I’m told the Joaquin Phoenix film, also starring Alessandro Nivola, will be shown on the second Friday night– right before the festival ends. Amazon is releasing “You Were Never Really Here” in the fall.

Amazon also has Todd Haynes’ “Wonderstruck.” No doubt charming, as it’s about children, Haynes’ film will be shown on the first Thursday right after opening night. Julianne Moore and Michelle Williams are the featured stars.

Pop: Kendrick Lamar Replaces Drake as Top Dollar Earner on Charts As “Surprise” Releases By Others Aren’t Working

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A couple of weeks ago I told you that Drake was the top dollar earner on the Song Revenue chart– a combination of paid downloads and streaming. He had the whole chart in his thrall.

This week it’s Kendrick Lamar. All twelve tracks from his “DAMN” album are in top 50. He has the top 5, and most of the top 15. That’s quite a feat. He took in around a million bucks for that top 5 and close to a million more for the rest of it.

Kendrick’s streaming income far outweighs his download numbers. Interesting: his fans aren’t requiring ownership. They just want to hear it.

Quite different: numbers from Harry Styles and Lady Gaga. Styles “Sign of the Times” is a bust, we know that. It was too long and went nowhere. In its second week, “Sign” took in just $99,753. Most of that was from downloads. “Sign” finished at number 19 on the Song Revenue chart, down from number 2.

Lady Gaga’s surprise single “The Cure” was an out of the box hit, but it collapsed almost immediately. She made $99,535 and that was 3 to 1 in favor of downloads. The song was a throwaway from Coachella as it turns out, and actually was a bad idea. Her “Joanne” album is what she should be concentrating on. If “The Cure” is going to be in “A Star is Born”– which is what I think it’s all about– I’d be a little worried about that.

A few other recent releases by ‘today’s stars’ haven’t hit as well as expected, too. Lorde’s “Green Light” and Katy Perry’s “Chained to the Rhythm” didn’t stick. Katy has a new single out this weekend “Bon Appetit” that’s not doing much. “Bon” is stuck at 18 on iTunes, which means there’s been little enthusiasm among her fans.

It’s tough out there! And all these surprise releases with no build up– they’re not helping anyone.

UPDATED Tom Hanks Heads to Worst Opening Weekend and Lowest Box Office Ever of Career

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SUNDAY: “The Circle” comes in with $9.3 million. You’d have go to back to 1990 or earlier to find lower Hanks numbers. But he’ll be back in the fall with “The Post,” which is Oscar bound and should restore his box office lustre.

SATURDAY: It pains me to write this because I am a huge Tom Hanks fan. But “The Circle” will be his worst ever opening weekend box office and likely lowest grossing film ever.

Last night “The Circle” took in $3.2 million in 3,163 theaters. The per screen average was just over $1,000. The film, co-starring Emma Watson, came in fourth last night behind “The Fate of the Furious,” a Bollywood film, and the reviled “How to Be A Latin Lover.”

It’s not like “The Circle” is a critical success. It has a 17 on Rotten Tomatoes. No one likes it. A small distributor bought it, which is kind of weird for Tom Hanks. He’s a two Oscar winner, beloved, with many many hits.

The only recent Hanks movie to open lower was “A Hologram for the King.” But that movie opened at many fewer theaters. What they have in common is that they’re based on books by Dave Eggers. Someone sold Hanks a bill of goods on that one.

If “The Circle” comes in at $9 million or lower for the weekend, then it will even be below “Cloud Atlas” — $9.6 million, and “Inferno” — $14 million.

Hanks is almost 61 and has lots of career left in him. Who is choosing these movies? It’s time to find some great material. He can’t just rely on Steven Spielberg. It’s ironic, too, because Hanks’s “SNL” performance last fall showed that he is in tip top form. He’s a canny actor who can pull off anything– anything that makes sense and is well written.

Here’s a clip from “Bridge of Spies” that I loved: